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On Mar 6, 1:24 pm, Charlie Morgan wrote:
On Tue, 6 Mar 2007 10:58:41 -0600, "KLC Lewis" wrote: KLC: "Nor does it have to be "scraped and sanded off every time you want to refresh things." Scuff the surface, clean, apply varnish topcoat, Bob's your uncle." Not true. You might get away with that for one extra season (if you have carefully kept everything covered with that lovely blue canvas - which you have already told us is necessary for varnish because it offers very little protection of its own) Total BS. Here are a couple of things you don't know: Clear Varnish may contain some form of UV protection or stabilization for the_varnish_itself, but does almost nothing to keep the underlying wood from being damaged by the sun. That's why you have to strip it all off every few years. The wood has still taken a beating. You're back peddling now. First you said : "which is why you have to scrape and sand it off every time you want to refresh things." Now it's every few years. To protect the wood REQUIRES some level of opacity, and the more opacity, the more protection. That's why you have to cover all your wood with canvas. I don't cover any of mine. That's because my wood is protected by the finish. Yours is not. Canvas are used to prolong the life of the varnish. And extend the time between recoating. Not so much to protect the wood. |
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